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JOHANNESBURG is the economic powerhouse of Africa, renowned for its
immense malls and cutting-edge business locations, for its top-ranked
hotels and entertainment venues, but just outdoors is another treasure
trove - its local parks.
And the agency responsible for the city's green heritage, City
Parks, is this year celebrating a centenary since Joburg's parks became
part of the city's formal administrative structure.
To mark this occasion, which coincides with the decade of
democracy, City Parks plans to "upgrade the ever-growing treasure trove
that is Joburg's green heritage". "In celebrating a centenary of
parklands in Johannesburg, we will be marketing our tourism sites,"
said Jenny Moodley, spokesperson for City Parks.
According to Moodley, the agency will spend some R100-million
over the next three years creating new parks in Soweto and other areas
in the north and south of Johannesburg. "We will establish new parks in
Diepkloof, Mofolo, Klipspruit, Diepsloot and Orange Farm," she said.
City Parks' managing director Luther Williamson intends to form
public-private partnerships and community-based initiatives to improve
facilities at parks around the city. In a media statement Williamson
said: "We no longer talk about challenges at Johannesburg City Parks,
instead we talk about solutions."
Other projects will include improving the existing facilities
at many of the parks. "We want to make the parks more relevant and
encourage people to make more use of the available facilities. We are
developing urban conservation," said Moodley.
The Wilds in Houghton
Although parklands formed a central feature of Johannesburg
from its very beginnings it was only in 1904 that they became part of a
formal administrative structure.
Braamfontein Cemetery was opened in 1888, quickly followed by
Joubert Park, still in existence, and Kruger Park, which was
established where Johannesburg Park Station is now located. By 1903
there were 10 parks and one cemetery in Johannesburg, which all fell
under the control of the town engineer.
"In March 1904 the parks and cemetery were transferred to a
newly-formed parks development and a superintendent of parks was
appointed," said Alan Buff, general manager of technical support for
City Parks.
The Chamber of Mines planted the very first trees in 1905 along
the streets of Parktown. "Trees were planted at Zoo Lake and they grew
very fast. The spare trees were given to the public," said Buff.
Johannesburg has grown into a green metropolis
Since then Johannesburg has grown into a green metropolis: by
the early 1990s six million trees had been planted on public and
private property within the boundaries of the old Johannesburg. Of the
six million trees, about 1.5-million trees were planted in the city's
parks, in cemeteries and on the sidewalks. With the incorporation of
other municipal structures into Johannesburg in 2000 a further
1.3-million street trees became the concern of City Parks.
Johannesburg City Parks is also responsible for 6 144 hectares
of developed parks; 4 443 hectares of undeveloped parks; 984 hectares
of nature reserves; 2 578 hectares of street verges; 73 hectares of
water surfaces; and 27 cemeteries and two crematoria.
Highlights of City Parks' green kingdom
The Botanic Gardens and Emmarentia Dam
Set in the heartland
of Joburg, bounded by the suburbs of Emmarentia and Franklin Roosevelt
Park, the 7.5-hectare park has two major attractions for visitors: the
Johannesburg Botanic Gardens, with one of the best succulent
collections in the world; and Emmarentia Dam, which offers rowing
enthusiasts the opportunity to enjoy their sport within the city.
Emmarentia Dam
The dam attracts a variety of bird life, while on the wide
spaces to the north west of the dam people walk their dogs, picnic, jog
along the pathways, or simply chill out.
Alongside the picnic area are the botanic gardens, with 2 500
specimens of succulents and more than 20 000 indigenous trees. There
are also terraced ponds and fountains and a Shakespearean garden, with
herbs and roses.
The Johannesburg Botanic Gardens also host several outdoor Sunday music soirées throughout the year.
Besides providing an open space where residents can relax, the
Johannesburg Botanic Gardens are also involved in a seed exchange
programme with 300 other gardens worldwide. It provides cutting-edge
scientific research, information and education about world flora
through its library and educational activities.
City Parks' nature reserves
City Parks manages four nature
reserves in the Greater Johannesburg area: Rietfontein, 24 kilometres
north of the city in Paulshof; Klipriviersberg, a 680-hectare reserve
11 kilometres south of the city; Kloofendal, a mountainous reserve to
the west of the city, in Roodepoort; and Melville Koppies, an historic
site five kilometres from the city centre.
Klipriviersberg, in the south, has 680 hectares of open veld
and unspoilt koppies for hiking. This magical spot not only offers a
range of wildlife, including zebra, black wildebeest, red hartebeest,
mountain reedbuck and duiker, it also has 150 bird species, 600 plant
species and 50 tree types.
It is also a rich archaeological site, with the remains of 19
stonewalled Iron Age settlements dating back to 1500, as well as
numerous Stone Age artefacts. A replica of an ancient BaTswana village
gives visitors an insight into the early pastoral lifestyle of the
region.
Melville Koppies, five kilometres north west of the city
centre, has been declared a national monument. It contains a Stone Age
camp with artefacts dating back 50 000 years and an Iron Age Furnace,
discovered in 1963. The iron-smelting debris found next to the furnace
was carbon-dated to around 1600.
Besides its historical value, Melville Koppies abounds with
animals, a variety of grasses, indigenous trees, shrubs and spring
flowers. Some of the oldest rocks on earth have also been found here:
the greenstone is estimated to be 3 000-million years old.
Kloofendal, eight kilometres from Soweto in the hills of
Roodepoort, is one of the first game reserves in Joburg, with zebra,
black wildebeest and other small buck. The 110-hectare reserve is still
under development and, according to City Parks, the area's importance
lies in its environmental education and eco-tourism potential.
Picnic spots
To understand Joburg's diversity, one must
experience its parks. City Parks has a number of picnic sites, such as
Zoo Lake, Wemmer Pan in Prolecon, Emmarentia Dam, Florida Lake and
Innesfree Park, in Sandton. Each park offers unique facilities for
visitors. Take the family on a cruise on Wemmer Pan or head out to
Florida Lake and visit the adjoining bird sanctuary.
Zoo Lake
Once a year people flock to the Zoo Lake for the Arts Alive jazz
concert or to Emmarentia Dam for the ongoing classical musical events.
In some parks, people party to loud kwaito music. The carnival
atmosphere at Thokoza Park - recently revamped at a cost of R20-million
- is exceptionally popular with teenagers and young adults. This park,
in Rockville, Soweto, hosts up to 10 000 people on weekends.
The Dorothy Nyembe Park in Dobsonville, Soweto is also a must-see. This
3.5-hectare park was reopened on 9 August last year to coincide with
Women's Day celebrations. Its upgrade cost R7.5-million and it
represents Joburg's commitment to improving infrastructure in
disadvantaged areas. It was named after African National Congress
activist Dorothy Nyembe, who spent many years as a political prisoner.
Its sporting facilities include netball, volleyball and basketball
courts, a soccer field and areas set aside for visitors to play chess
and morabaraba.
Heritage trails
The agency has a number of heritage trails
such as the Braamfontein Cemetery. Here memorials to Enoch Mankayi
Sontonga, who was the composer of the African hymn, and South Africa's
national anthem, Nkosi Sikelel' i Afrika, and Nagappen and Valliamma,
early martyrs of Mahatma Gandhi's passive resistance campaign, can be
seen.
Walter Sisulu memorial in Newclare
The graves of struggle veterans Alfred Nzo and Joe Modise can
be found alongside child Aids activist Nkosi Johnson in West Park
Cemetery, near Montgomery Park, while in Newclare a memorial to ANC
stalwart Walter Sisulu has been erected. In Avalon Cemetery, in
Chiawelo, Soweto, many of the heroes of the struggle for democracy have
been laid to rest - including Helen Joseph, Lillian Ngoyi and Joe Slovo
of the ANC, and Zephania Mothopeng, the fiery former Pan Africanist
Congress leader, Tsitsi Mashinini, a student leader of the 1976
uprisings and Hector Pieterson, the first student shot on 16 June 1976.
Brixton has a memorial for soldiers who died in the WW1, while
at the Avalon Cemetery the Mendi memorial remembers the 217 soldiers
who died when the ship the Mendi sank in the North Sea off the British
coast in February 1917.
The Oppenheimer Tower in Jabavu, Soweto, displays the statues
of King Shaka, Zulu leader and warrior, King Moshoeshoe, the Basotho
strategist, and mining magnate Ernest Oppenheimer. The bricks that
built this tower come from the remains of Sophiatown, a lively
non-racial suburb destroyed during the apartheid era.
Sophiatown was the stamping ground of flamboyant and witty
writers like Can Themba, Nat Nakasa and Casey Motsisi. It was also the
place to watch the sexy lead vocalist of the Harlem Swingsters, Dolly
Rathebe, who starred in the first feature film to be shot on location
in South Africa, Jim Comes to Joburg.
The cultural heritage of Johannesburg continues to grow, giving
visitors a rich choice of places to visit. The once dusty mining town
has transformed over the past 100 years into the greenest city on
earth, and City Parks is planning to celebrate this growth.
City Parks offers school tours of the various heritage trails. To organise a school tour contact Alan Buff on 011 712 6605.
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